San Diego Chargers running back Danny Woodhead celebrates after scoring one of his four touchdowns on Sunday in San Diego. DENIS POROY , THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN DIEGO – The concrete Titanic otherwise known as Qualcomm Stadium erupted with 6 minutes left in the third quarter of the Chargers’ 30-14 victory against Miami on Sunday.

Leading 23-0, Philip Rivers flung a deep ball down the Miami sideline to Malcom Floyd, who vaulted into the air while hugging his defender and pinned the ball to that defender’s back to make a first-down catch.

It was a circus play for a pair of pros who’ve grown accustomed to those in their 12 years together in San Diego, this being Floyd’s final NFL season.

But it was a relative newcomer to the city – running back Danny Woodhead – who consistently ignited a nostalgic and angry crowd in potentially the Chargers’ last game in San Diego.

He finished the day with eight carries for 10 yards, six catches for 50 yards and all four of the team’s touchdowns, becoming the first Charger to score four times in a game since LaDainian Tomlinson did it in 2007.

“I’m very thankful for my teammates and the coaches who put me in the position (to make plays),” Woodhead said. “All I have to do is go out and do what I do.”

This game was almost a season reset for Woodhead, who’d amassed just 116 yards on 41 carries in the past nine games after surging his way to 144 yards on 33 carries in the first four games.

He had three carries for five yards and three catches for eight yards last week against Kansas City, and he had three carries for 10 yards and three catches for 24 yards two weeks ago against Denver.

“Everyone was asking a couple weeks ago why (Woodhead) doesn’t get the ball more,” Chargers coach Mike McCoy said after the game. “Well, obviously, if he’s going to do this every week, (then) we should have given it to him a lot more. Phenomenal.”

The 5-foot-8 tank pounded in just one score on the ground – a 2-yard run in the second quarter.

He caught the other three: a 20-yard catch-and-run in the first quarter, which marked San Diego’s first opening-drive touchdown since Nov. 9, a 9-yard shoestring catch to put the Chargers up 23-0 in the second quarter and another 9-yard grab for the final score late in the fourth.

“(He) never shocks you, right?” McCoy said. “… He is a playmaker and we are very fortunate to have him here.”

Melvin Gordon left the game in the second quarter with a knee injury after gaining 41 yards on 15 carries. That opened up the playbook for Woodhead as well as Donald Brown, who added 90 yards on 12 carries.

Woodhead now has all six touchdowns scored by a Charger running back this season. He scored two in the home opener and no running back had picked up another until Sunday.

“We kind of got a kick out of that, like, ‘Hey, we ran one in,’” Rivers joked with wet eyes after the game.

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